British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

Historic Grade-II listed Big Mill ‘fully alight’ as locals told to stay away

28 March 2026

Whitehall whistleblower reveals four ways to fix ‘broken Britain’ and the real reason it won’t happen under Keir Starmer

28 March 2026

‘Pray you have found peace’

28 March 2026

Have Easter treats gone too far? | UK News

28 March 2026

England 1-1 Uruguay: Thomas Tuchel questions ‘bad day at office’ for officials

28 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » UK police overwhelmed as Shabana Mahmood warns lawless networks are running rings around 43 outdated forces
Politics

UK police overwhelmed as Shabana Mahmood warns lawless networks are running rings around 43 outdated forces

By britishbulletin.com19 January 20263 Mins Read
UK police overwhelmed as Shabana Mahmood warns lawless networks are running rings around 43 outdated forces
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The Home Secretary is set to unveil major policing reforms this month, with a white paper arguing that England and Wales’s 43-force structure is fundamentally unfit for tackling contemporary criminal activity.

Government briefing documents describe the existing system as outdated and incapable of protecting communities from increasingly sophisticated offenders.


The paper contends that if ministers were designing a policing framework from scratch today, they would not replicate the current arrangement.

Criminal networks are exploiting technological advances, particularly artificial intelligence, at a pace that local constabularies cannot match.

Forces are finding it difficult to recruit specialist talent and acquire appropriate tools to disrupt offenders and safeguard the public.

The nature of the current model means some serious crimes go unpunished, according to the Government’s assessment.

More than nine in ten criminal cases now feature a digital component, whether through electronic devices or social media platforms, yet individual forces struggle to develop the expertise needed to process enormous volumes of electronic evidence.

Fraud has become the single largest category of crime, accounting for 44 per cent of offences recorded in the Crime Survey for England and Wales.

Government briefing documents describe the existing system as outdated

|

PA

Last year saw over four million fraud incidents, representing a 14 per cent increase on the previous twelve months.

Victims are frequently targeted by overseas scammers operating online, with no regard for police force boundaries.

Recorded sexual offences have climbed by 95 per cent between 2015/2016 and 2024/2025.

During the past year alone, one in eight women experienced domestic abuse, sexual assault or stalking.

Shabana Mahmood is planning a major overhaul

| PA

The current system divides responsibility for serious, cross-border and technology-enabled offending among four separate bodies: Counter-terror Policing, the National Crime Agency, Regional Organised Crime Units, and City of London Police as the national lead for fraud and cybercrime.

These crime categories are becoming increasingly interlinked, with states such as Russia now using serious organised crime groups to conduct sabotage operations across Britain and Europe.

A force-by-force approach hampers the sharing of intelligence and undermines opportunities for coordinated national operations against offenders.

At present, approximately 20,000 devices sit in queues awaiting specialist digital forensic examination, leaving investigations stalled and victims waiting.

Police officers in Westminster | GETTY

Constabularies frequently procure IT systems that cannot communicate with one another, locking away data and preventing a unified national response to complex threats.

The Government has already launched a new Violence Against Women and Girls strategy, deploying the full power of the state to ensure perpetrators cannot evade justice.

A comprehensive Fraud Strategy is expected early this year, aimed at both protecting consumers and dismantling criminal networks.

Counter-terrorism policing has received an additional £140 million in funding.

The UK’s intelligence services have been allocated nearly £500 million more, bringing their resources to record levels.

The National Crime Agency has also benefited from increased investment.

Smaller constabularies face particular difficulties building specialist cyber, digital forensic and fraud units, forcing them to redirect resources away from local priorities.

An estimated 90 per cent of police technology spending goes towards maintaining legacy systems rather than adopting innovations such as facial recognition and artificial intelligence.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Whitehall whistleblower reveals four ways to fix ‘broken Britain’ and the real reason it won’t happen under Keir Starmer

Lord Mandelson under pressure to come clean on personal text messages after key information lost

Kemi Badenoch considering burqa ban amid Tory review into Islamist extremism

Zia Yusuf pinpoints ‘critical’ moment for GB News viewers as he blasts Britain’s ‘low grade’ leaders

Metropolitan Police re-examining theft of Keir Starmer’s former advisor

GB News star left in tears after small boat migrant sentenced over rape of 12-year-old

Tim Davie lands first role after controversy-laden tenure at national broadcaster

Nigel Farage invited to iconic British stadium for Premier League match following backlash from Ipswich visit

Keir Starmer accused of ‘buying off’ Sadiq Khan while PM eyes up handing peerage to future rival

Editors Picks

Whitehall whistleblower reveals four ways to fix ‘broken Britain’ and the real reason it won’t happen under Keir Starmer

28 March 2026

‘Pray you have found peace’

28 March 2026

Have Easter treats gone too far? | UK News

28 March 2026

England 1-1 Uruguay: Thomas Tuchel questions ‘bad day at office’ for officials

28 March 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Lord Mandelson under pressure to come clean on personal text messages after key information lost

28 March 2026

Bishop hits out at King Charles for including other religions in Christian holiday messages as Easter looms

28 March 2026

JK Rowling issues verdict on Harry Potter adaptation trailer despite backlash from fans: ‘Missing the spark’

28 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.